Hamas Takes to Social Media To Warn Israelis — in Hebrew

Hamas militants warned Israel for the first time, and in Hebrew, of an impending rocket attack, adopting psychological warfare with the Jewish state while trying to raise the morale of Gaza’s Palestinians harder hit by Israeli bombardment.

Around 160 Palestinians in the tiny overcrowded enclave, most of them civilians, have been killed in six days of conflict while Israel has reported no dead, prompting Gaza’s Islamist rulers to resort to innovative publicity tactics.

Hamas’s domestic standing has taken a beating in peacetime as poverty and hunger have worsened in the Gaza Strip, worsened by an Israeli-Egyptian blockade and the demolition of border smuggling tunnels that were the lifeblood of its economy.

Now, by burnishing its accomplishments in its latest bloody showdown with Israel, Hamas has recalled its pre-2007 days as an militant faction under fire, and not the political custodian of one of the most troubled, densely-populated tracts on earth.

On Hamas’s Al-Aqsa TV at eight in the evening Saturday, the voice of Abu Ubeida - the perpetually masked and camouflaged spokesman of the group’s armed wing - broadcast a warning.

“(We) will direct a military strike with rockets at the Tel Aviv area and its surroundings with a J80 rocket after 9 P.M.”

Audio of the threat in Hebrew followed, and Israeli television stations immediately picked up the news.

At seven minutes past nine, a series of thunderous roars in the coastal territory signaled the outgoing rockets. Warning sirens promptly sounded in the greater Tel Aviv region, the heavily populated heart of the Jewish state.

“Our rockets have struck Tel Aviv!” the loudspeaker of a Gaza mosque blared. The roars of men and boys arose from the windows of houses: “God is Great!”

No rocket actually hit Tel Aviv. They were either shot down by Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile interceptor or fell harmlessly on open ground. But that did not matter in Gaza.

Its inhabitants mostly rely for news on Hamas-controlled radio, TV and text messages, which hail rocket attacks on the “Zionist entity” and praise as martyrs the some 160 Palestinians killed since the six-day-old Israeli offensive began.

That no one in Israel has been killed in the attacks has been dismissed as a lie by Hamas-run media, and the Palestinian public appears to agree.

“When we heard the threat last night, we were overjoyed. It’s excellent,” said Muhammad Abu Asi, 19, who says he and his family rely solely on Al-Aqsa for updates during the war.

“The resistance is striking more painful blows than ever before…(Israel) lies to cover their losses, because they know that would be a victory for us. We’re sure we’ll win.”

Hamas and many residents say telephoned Israeli warnings of impending air strikes on houses, many of which it has not acted upon for days, is part of its own campaign to demoralize Gaza.

The Gaza interior ministry on Sunday dismissed as “psychological warfare” Israeli leaflets dropped in border areas urging people to evacuate ahead of a possible ground invasion.

BEACHFRONT TEL AVIV, HOUSE-BOUND GAZA

But Hamas’s rhetoric appeared more to entertain than frighten Israelis, even as warning sirens beckoned its hundreds of thousands of residents to immediately take cover in shelters.

Israeli television stations broadcast live images of the Tel Aviv skyline on Saturday and showed the promised rockets blown up in mid-air by the military’s Iron Dome umbrella.

Beachfront cafes in Israel’s commercial capital erupted with cheers at the images. At a concert by the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, an announcement just before the start of the show told people to wait in their seats until the sirens ended.

Then the music began.

But Israelis were disappointed by the cancellation of a Neil Young concert on Thursday in Tel Aviv because of the rockets.

Gaza families, on the other hand, are mostly house-bound for fear of the Israeli bombs. They tune in for hours to local TV’s pulse-quickening coverage, blending the gory aftermath of Israeli air strikes with bulletins of triumphs in battle.

Later a flash appears: “Rockets of the resistance strike Ashkelon,” a city in southern Israel, and martial songs play. The Iron Dome interceptions are almost never mentioned.

Hamas media generally spurned any communications with Israel and avoided conveying its reactions to violent events in the Gaza Strip during previous small wars in 2008-9 and 2012.

Saturday’s rocket warning did bring about a rare but fruitless exchange between the purveyors of news on the two sides. Israel’s Channel 2 and Hamas’s Al Aqsa carried live feeds of each other’s broadcasts, the first to publish the warning, the latter to view the reaction.

“Can we talk?” the Israeli anchor asked his counterpart.

“We’ll continue to broadcast Palestinian strength. There can be no dialog between Palestinians and the Zionist occupation,” the Palestinian anchor sniped back through a translator.

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